After the assassination of President Kennedy, a number of people involved in the investigation either "commited suicide," were killed in "accidents," or disappeared. The truth of what went on during that incredible period of time is only being hidden by a conspiracy of powerful people - at least that is what I and many other people have concluded from the events. In Parallax View , Loren Singer, an American novelist, has similar ideas in an adventure story which closely coincides with some of the sinister events that have recieved little worldwide publicity. Twenty-five men and women appear on a piece of film. They were witnesses to a shattering and violent event. One by one they die. To save themselves, the four who have survived must find out why they have been marked for death.
Loren Adelson Singer was an American novelist, best-known for his 1970 political thriller, The Parallax View, which was made into a successful 1974 film, of the same name, starring Warren Beatty, Paula Prentiss, Hume Cronyn and William Daniels.
Big fan of '70s paranoia thriller movies, me. One of the bleakest and best of them is of course The Parallax View, which is based on this book.
I expected it to be pretty bad, but found it's actually quite an engaging thriller, that only really fumbles it in the last quarter of the book.
The idea of a (shadow-)government run Parallax Corporation, a group that seeks out psychopaths in society to become assassins, is still quite effective.
The film is better, it is much more focused - the book gets distracted by its own subplots. An interesting difference in the book is that two journalist colleagues try to solve the mystery of the Parallax Corporation (instead of just one Warren Beatty), and one of them is eventually hired as the assassin of the other. Sadly that idea isn't worked out very well, and you get the feeling the author was much more enamoured by his ideas and what it said about US society at that moment, and forgot a thriller also needs a good plot.
The book's ending is rushed and characters spend a lot of time spouting philosophies and thoughts, and it all feels a bit nebulous, rushed and ultimately unsatisfying.
The film veers away from the book's plot halfway through the book, and is much the better for it.
Interesting to have read it, not sure I would recommend it to other fans of the film.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
How this was ever published I will never know. It's an insult to good novel writing. When it begins you feel like you've missed a chapter - I even checked to see if I was really on page one and hadn't got a duff copy. It then runs wild through all sorts of irrelevant and/or impossible-to-believe scenarios, never reveals anything behind the oh so important reel of film, before ending absurdly. Having bought it for a dollar I gladly binned it.
Terrible book. Virtually no bearing on the much better and more focused movie. About the only relationship is the title and the initial setup. I think that the author was into some sort of self-indulgent trip. None of the characters were particularly worthy of the reader's interest or engagement. I kept waiting for something to happen. Too much philosophizing and political meandering dialogues.
I was drawn to this book by an urge to get more answers than the movie provided, but I now realize that jettisoning the reasons for the conspiracy was the best move that Lumet and company could have made. In the film, the most terrifying aspect of this shadowy Parallax operation was that they seemed to have no philosophy at all, that they hired out killers to anyone, which resulted in an endless parade of assassinations. And since there's always someone ready to clip the string on any outspoken idealist, the world would be doomed. As Beatty says, "It seemed like someone was always killing the best and brightest." So in a world where anyone can zap their political rivals, the worst and dullest shall rise! However, in the book (during the big Final Boss speech during dinner), we realize that political killers are actually a way of channeling an increasingly aggressive populace, satiating their rage to curb any uprisings, which is *much* less frightening than the hopelessness depicted in the film. What the book does do that's interesting is how it amplifies the "doubling" aspects of the plot. In the movie, we discover there are always two assassins on a job, sometimes not even working together but in opposition. But in the book, instead of Beatty's "Joe Frady (cat)" going it alone, there are a pair of reporters who immediately take the Parallax test and successfully sign up to be assassins, even though they realize they will be pitted against one another by the company. So no real investigation materializes here, just the question of who will kill the other one first. This is fascinating as far as exposing the underlying savagery of normal people, but even this tension is abandoned in favor of a shockingly limp detour into a love story with the wife of one of the Parallax lackeys. Not only does this take up a bizarre amount of space in the narrative, it also sidelines everything else all the way until the end. But it's such a small book that maybe I'd still recommend it as a curiosity, especially if you're very familiar with the film, so at the very least you can see how a scandalous gay orgy in the novel is distilled into a short loving glance between two characters in the movie, or why that odd fishing sequence was all that was left of an equally odd (and seemingly endless) angling interlude. The JFK mantra "back and to the left" definitely works here, especially when you're talking about literal and figurative worms on hooks.
In this thrilling political fiction, Singer is able to excitingly explore the same themes revolving around the Watergate Scandal. Paranoia, unchecked powers, systemic corruption, conspiracy and more all contribute to show the parallels of this real and fictional scandals that show the fragility of democracy and the power of governmental media manipulation. In a murder/ political "mystery about patriotism, violence, and cultural paranoia" this story follows a newspaper journalist following the assassination of a senator and the witnesses. Inspired by JFK's assassination, this book turned film tells a fictional thriller of politics and how easily the media can manipulate society. Although it predates the Watergate incident, Singer captures the very same atmosphere in her novel with themes of abuse of power and distrust. Most importantly, this novel and the real life scandal parallel in highlighting the importance of journalism as the journalist in the literary work mirrors the two journalist who helped uncover the truths of Watergate, Woodward and Bernstein. These two narrative emphasize the crucial role of journalism in a society that relies on it to expose corruption in the government.
This is a hard book to review. It is well-written, but the plot is dated and far-fetched. A group of journalists who witnessed an assassination are being systematically killed by hitmen hired by a secret Bureau of our government. Some of the action scenes are chilling, but the overall atmosphere is both cold and futile. Plus, the propaganda rants got old after a while. I can only hope that the movie adaptation, starring Warren Beatty and Paula Prentiss (1974), is better than the book.
The Parallax View by Loren Singer is a dynamite 1970 paranoia conspiracy thriller, the inspiration for the 1974 Warren Beatty film of the same name. Directed by Alan J. Pakula, it's an excellent film about the brainwashing of the American people and the process of government manipulation, it still holds up today, you should see it.
Malcolm Graham and a few other newspaper men, photographers and reporters meet to watch a film reel of an event they covered. What they have in common is each person in the film is being killed off in accidental ways, one by one. Some scoff and some become frightened, as they begin to investigate. Malcolm follows the death of his friend and uncovers system of secret agencies who work within or outside of the government to disrupt dissent. Malcolm signs up for the program - a series of visual and mental protocals, which aims to systematically brainwash and set up 'lone gunmen' to accomplish whatever is deemed necessary by the unknown bureau, and he waits to find out if he is a suitable employee.
If you are a cynical nihilist, this is for you. At first a series of odd accidents soon becomes a trap that is impossible to escape from. The Parallax Corporation is just one of many outside contractors with an unknown head, merely a testing organization for societal alienation, and stability reaction working for the Bureau of Social Structure. Unlike the film, this remains in the New York area, and has a few similarities to the movie which were nice to revisit, but the book takes a more personal approach, less action. Malcolm falls into a pit of paranoid delusion that is all that more frightening because his fears are completely real. The Parallax Corp. may be an experiment or a continuing program, but it offers persuasive arguments for those acting against the government or the government placating it's people with lone gunman theories.
A small group of journalists notice that the witnesses to a long-ago political assassination are mysteriously dying - and worry that they might be next. One of them tries to infiltrate a corporation that hires government assassins, with dangerous results. Most famous for inspiring the Alan J. Pakula-Warren Beatty film from 1974, the novel is, unfortunately, better as a concept (or a template for the film) than a book. The characters are thinly sketched, the plot murky and much of it bogged down in indiscernible exposition, or else author rants about the military-industrial complex that are very much of their time. Beyond the very basic concept and a few specific scenes (the assassin personality test, rendered as an unforgettable montage in the movie version, is the closest parallel) little of the book survived to the film version; there's no assassination to foil, while the dramatic focus is dispersed among three leading characters, none of whom emerge as particularly compelling. A thriller without thrills, just some interesting ideas that worked better in another medium.